Cleopatra's family spoke Greek.Cleopatra's family spoke Greek.Cleopatra's family spoke Greek.Cleopatra's family spoke Greek.Cleopatra's family spoke Greek.Cleopatra's family spoke Greek.Cleopatra's family spoke Greek.Cleopatra's family spoke Greek.Cleopatra's family spoke Greek.
The correct phrase to use is "spoke to." For example, "I spoke to her yesterday."
The Romans spoke the Latin language. The upper classes or the educated also spoke Greek.The Romans spoke the Latin language. The upper classes or the educated also spoke Greek.The Romans spoke the Latin language. The upper classes or the educated also spoke Greek.The Romans spoke the Latin language. The upper classes or the educated also spoke Greek.The Romans spoke the Latin language. The upper classes or the educated also spoke Greek.The Romans spoke the Latin language. The upper classes or the educated also spoke Greek.The Romans spoke the Latin language. The upper classes or the educated also spoke Greek.The Romans spoke the Latin language. The upper classes or the educated also spoke Greek.The Romans spoke the Latin language. The upper classes or the educated also spoke Greek.
Both "I spoke with" and "I spoke to" are correct. However, "I spoke to" is more commonly used in informal conversation, while "I spoke with" can be seen as more formal.
"Spoke to" suggests a one-way conversation where you are the speaker, while "spoke with" implies a two-way conversation where you are actively engaging with another person.
he spoke Tamil.
A spoke
The correct form would be "spoken." For example: "She has spoken to the manager about the issue."
Can be either:transitive: She spoke many carefully considered words.intransitive: He spoke indecisively.
They spoke Hebrew!
He spoke germen
Spoke can be a verb (past tense of speak) or a noun: I spoke to the security officer about getting a temporary access card. My bicycle wheel has a bent spoke.